All Stories

  1. New stimuli for infant audiometry may be too wide in their frequency composition.
  2. Cochlear Place Specificity of the Auditory Brainstem Response to Narrowband Chirp versus 2-1-2 stimuli: High-Pass Noise/Derived Responses
  3. FREQUENCY SPECIFICITY OF NARROWBAND CHIRP AND 2-1-2 STIMULI: SPECTRAL ANALYSES
  4. Derived-band auditory brainstem responses: cochlear contributions determined by narrowband maskers
  5. DERIVED-BAND AUDITORY BRAINSTEM RESPONSES: COCHLEAR CONTRIBUTIONS DETERMINED BY NARROWBAND MASKERS
  6. Infant Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials to Lateralized Noise Shifts Produced by Changes in Interaural Time Difference
  7. Monotic Versus Dichotic Multiple-Stimulus Auditory Steady State Responses in Young Children
  8. Auditory Brainstem Responses to Bone-Conducted Brief Tones in Young Children with Conductive or Sensorineural Hearing Loss
  9. Multiple-ASSR Interactions in Adults with Sensorineural Hearing Loss
  10. Slow Cortical Potentials and Amplification—Part II: Acoustic Measures
  11. Slow Cortical Potentials and Amplification—Part I: N1-P2 Measures
  12. Multiple Auditory Steady State Response Thresholds to Bone Conduction Stimuli in Adults With Normal and Elevated Thresholds
  13. The Efficiency of the Single- Versus Multiple-Stimulus Auditory Steady State Responses in Infants
  14. The British Columbia's Children's Hospital Tone-Evoked Auditory Brainstem Response Protocol: How Long Do Infants Sleep and How Much Information Can Be Obtained in One Appointment?
  15. Multiple-ASSR Thresholds in Infants and Young Children with Hearing Loss
  16. Effects of Various Articulatory Features of Speech on Cortical Event-Related Potentials and Behavioral Measures of Speech-Sound Processing
  17. Does the 40-Hz Auditory Steady-State Response Show the Binaural Masking Level Difference?
  18. Normal Multiple Auditory Steady-State Response Thresholds to Air-Conducted Stimuli in Infants
  19. Normal Ipsilateral/Contralateral Asymmetries in Infant Multiple Auditory Steady-State Responses to Air- and Bone-Conduction Stimuli
  20. Maturation of bone conduction multiple auditory steady-state responses
  21. The Effect of Brief-Tone Stimulus Duration on the Brain Stem Auditory Steady-State Response
  22. Effects of Bone Oscillator Coupling Method, Placement Location, and Occlusion on Bone-Conduction Auditory Steady-State Responses in Infants
  23. Human electrophysiological examination of buildup of the precedence effect
  24. Multiple Auditory Steady-State Response Thresholds to Bone-Conduction Stimuli in Young Infants with Normal Hearing
  25. Effects of Low-Pass Noise Masking on Auditory Event-Related Potentials to Speech
  26. Effects of Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Personal Hearing Aids on Cortical Event-Related Potential and Behavioral Measures of Speech-Sound Processing
  27. Multiple Auditory Steady-State Responses to Bone-Conduction Stimuli in Adults with Normal Hearing
  28. Auditory brainstem and middle latency responses to 1 kHz tones in noise-masked normally-hearing and sensorineurally hearing-impaired adults
  29. Comparison of multiple auditory steady-state responses (80 versus 40 Hz) and slow cortical potentials for threshold estimation in hearing-impaired adults
  30. Artifactual Responses When Recording Auditory Steady-State Responses
  31. Brain Stem and Cortical Mechanisms Underlying the Binaural Masking Level Difference in Humans: An Auditory Steady-State Response Study
  32. Normal Brief-Tone Bone-Conduction Behavioral Thresholds Using the B-71 Transducer: Three Occlusion Conditions
  33. Intracerebral Sources of Human Auditory Steady-State Responses
  34. Effects of Sensorineural Hearing Loss on Cortical Event-Related Potential and Behavioral Measures of Speech-Sound Processing
  35. Place specificity of multiple auditory steady-state responses
  36. Thresholds determined using the monotic and dichotic multiple auditory steady-state response technique in normal-hearing subjects
  37. The Effects of Decreased Audibility Produced by High-Pass Noise Masking on N1 and the Mismatch Negativity to Speech Sounds /ba/ and /da/
  38. The Effects of Broadband Noise Masking on Cortical Event-Related Potentials to Speech Sounds /ba/ and /da/
  39. Frequency specificity of the human auditory brainstem and middle latency responses to brief tones. I. High-pass noise masking
  40. Frequency specificity of the human auditory brainstem and middle latency responses to brief tones. II. Derived response analyses
  41. The effects of decreased audibility produced by high-pass noise masking on cortical event-related potentials to speech sounds /ba/ and /da/
  42. Estimation of the Pure-Tone Audiogram by the Auditory Brainstem Response: A Review
  43. Frequency-specific identification of hearing loss using transient-evoked otoacoustic emissions to clicks and tones
  44. Electrophysiologic Manifestations of Impaired Temporal Lobe Auditory Processing in Verbal Auditory Agnosia
  45. Thresholds for Auditory Brain Stem Responses to Tones in Notched Noise from Infants and Young Children with Normal Hearing or Sensorineural Hearing Loss
  46. Pure-tone masking profiles for human auditory brainstem and middle latency responses to 500-Hz tones
  47. Auditory Brainstem Response Wave I Prediction of Conductive Component in Infants and Young Children
  48. Low-Frequency Hearing and the Auditory Brainstem Response
  49. Pure-tone masking profiles for human auditory brainstem and middle latency responses
  50. Normal Infant and Adult Auditory Brainstem Responses to Bone-Conducted Tones
  51. Transient evoked otoacoustic emissions: clinical applications and technical considerations
  52. Frequency Specificity of the Auditory Brain Stem Response to Bone-Conducted Tones in Infants and Adults
  53. Interaction of Click Intensity and Cochlear Hearing Loss on Auditory Brain Stem Response Wave V Latency
  54. Evoked Potential Assessment of Auditory System Integrity in Infants
  55. Maturation of the Contralaterally Recorded Auditory Brain Stem Response
  56. The Human Auditory Steady-State Evoked Potentials
  57. Thresholds for Short-Latency Auditory-Evoked Potentials to Tones in Notched Noise in Normal-Hearing and Hearing-Impaired Subjects
  58. Auditory Brain Stem Responses to Bone-Conducted Tones in Infants
  59. Inconsistency of auditory middle latency and steady-state responses in infants
  60. Otitis media, auditory sensitivity, and language outcomes at one year
  61. Auditory steady-state responses: threshold prediction using phase coherence
  62. Human Auditory Steady State Potentials
  63. Normal hearing thresholds for clicks
  64. Technical Aspects of Brainstem Evoked Potential Audiometry Using Tones